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Ang Lee
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BIRTHDAY
October 23, 1954
Taiwan
RECENT CREDITS
Taking Woodstock
(FILM)
Aug. 26, 2009
Lust, Caution
(FILM)
Oct. 5, 2007
One Last Ride
(FILM)
Apr. 7, 2006
Brokeback Mountain
(FILM)
Dec. 9, 2005
Hulk
(FILM)
Jun. 20, 2003
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Ang Lee Credits
BIOGRAPHY
Having garnered international acclaim for his work, Taiwanese director Ang Lee was one of the first Chinese-born directors to find critical and commercial success on both sides of the Pacific. Born in 1954 in Taipei, he....
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Having garnered international acclaim for his work, Taiwanese director Ang Lee was one of the first Chinese-born directors to find critical and commercial success on both sides of the Pacific. Born in 1954 in Taipei, he graduated from the National Taiwan College of Arts in 1975 and then went to the United States, where he studied theater directing at the University of Illinois and film production at New York University.
After winning awards in 1985 for his student work (while at N.Y.U., he also worked on Spike Lee's acclaimed student film, Joe's Bed-Stuy Barbershop: We Cut Heads), Lee spent the next six years working on screenplays, eventually making his directorial debut in 1992 with Pushing Hands. A comedy about the generational and cultural gaps in a Taiwanese family in New York, it won awards in Lee's native country. His next film, The Wedding Banquet (1993), further explored cultural and generational differences through a gay New Yorker who stages a marriage of convenience to please his visiting Taiwanese parents. The film met with widespread acclaim, winning a Golden Bear at the Berlin Film Festival and a Best Director prize at the Seattle Film Festival, as well as Golden Globe and Academy Award nominations.
With his international reputation growing, Lee went on to make Eat Drink Man Woman (1994), his third film to focus on the theme of generational differences -- and also his third film to feature stately actor Sihung Lung. Eat Drink Man Woman proved Lee's most critically and commercially successful film to date, winning a Best Foreign Film Oscar nomination, as well as Independent Spirit Award and BAFTA nominations. Following this success, Lee ventured into the world of mainstream Hollywood filmmaking with Sense and Sensibility in 1995. A fairly faithful adaptation of Jane Austen's novel, with a screenplay written by its star, Emma Thompson, the film proved another success for the director, earning honors including a Best Picture Oscar nomination (it went on to win Best Adapted Screenplay for Thompson), a Golden Bear at the Berlin Film Festival, and a number of British Academy Awards. Lee was voted the year's Best Director by the National Board of Review and the New York Film Critics Circle.
In 1997, the director next turned to adapting Rick Moody's novel The Ice Storm. The story of familial dysfunction in Watergate-era Connecticut, the film featured an impressive cast including Kevin Kline, Sigourney Weaver, Joan Allen, and Christina Ricci. Lee brought a sober, painterly touch to the material, and his approach won him international critical acclaim. The film won a number of international awards, including a 1997 Best Screenplay award at the Cannes Film Festival for James Schamus. Having secured a place on Hollywood's roster of A-list directors, Lee next tried his hand at Civil War drama with Ride With the Devil, which featured a cast of some of Hollywood's more prominent up-and-comers, including Tobey Maguire (who had worked with Lee on The Ice Storm), Jonathan Rhys Myers, Jewel Kilcher, and Jeffrey Wright.
Lee's next effort, Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon (2000), was a lavish and exciting fantasy that would eventually become the highest grossing foreign-language film ever released in the U.S. A spectacular romantic adventure that became a phenominal international success, Crouching Tiger earned award nominations across the board, including 14 Oscar Nominations, and 16 British Academy Award Nominations. When the smoke cleared and the winners were finally announced, Crouching Tiger earned, among others, four Oscars including Best Foreign Language Film, Best Director at the Golden Globes, and four British Academy Awards including Best Director. Aside from simply being a breathtaking and visually extravagant adventure, Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon was a rare example of a subtitled film that achieved widespread stateside success.
After serving as screenwriter for the film Tortilla Soup (a Mexican-American take on Lee's own comedy Eat Drink Man Woman), Lee raised eyebrows worldwide when he announced that he would take the helm for the long awaited live-action comic book adaptation Hulk. The resulting film was without question one of the most brooding comic book films ever adapted to the big screen. A melancholy study in father/child relationships that largely eschewed comic book action in favor of character driven melodramatics, the beautifully shot film would also prove one of the closest visual representations of an actual comic book ever committed to celluliod. Despite its smart use of frames and inspired use of color and transitions, the film simply failed to live up to audience expectations on the heels of Sam Raimi's character-driven but still action-packed Spider-Man; leaving a large collection of movie-related merchandise to gather dust on toy store shelves nationwide.
Any fears about Lee's impact as a director were laid to rest, however, in 2005 when he directed the monumentally acclaimed Brokeback Mountain, staring Jake Gyllenhaal and Heath Ledger. The film's sensitive and epic portrayal of a thriving romance that survives between two Wyoming cowboys in the 1960's was praised as both elegiac and grounded. Lee's deft handling of material that simultaneously drew on the established themes of classic cinema and pioneered completely unexplored territory in mass media could not have been more exalted and Lee won a Golden Globe for Best Director of a Motion Picture, as well as an Academy Award for Best Direction. The film also picked up Golden Globe awards for Best Motion Picture Drama, Best Screenplay, and Best Original Song in a Motion Picture, and another Oscar for Best Original Score.
~ Rebecca Flint Marx, All Movie Guide
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Headlines
Box Office Tracking: 'Incredible Hulk' Headed to 60M; 'The Hap...
Jun. 8, 2008
Marvel Studio’s second movie is a much tougher proposition. Adding the word
Incredible
to the title, bringing on
Transporter
director Louis Leterrier and Academy Award nominee Edward Norton, and essentially ‘re-booting’ a franchise after just five years is an audacious gamble, and it appears as though it will pay off solidly.
Read Story
Pitt's 'Basterds' and More to Appear at Cannes '09
Posted: Apr. 23, 2009
Tarantino and Lee Among Cannes Nominees
Posted: Apr. 23, 2009
Soderbergh Recruits Demetri Martin to Play 'Moneyball' with Pitt
Posted: Apr. 21, 2009
Top 10 Summer Bombs
Posted: Aug. 14, 2008
Studio Report Card: Paramount is No. 1, but Who Will Finish 2nd?
Posted: Jul. 2, 2008
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Recently Worked With...
Demetri Martin
Taking Woodstock
Released: Aug. 28, 2009
Leung Chiu-Wai
Lust, Caution
Released: Oct. 5, 2007
Patrick Cupo
One Last Ride
Released: Apr. 7, 2006
Heath Ledger
Brokeback Mountain
Released: Dec. 16, 2005
Cara Buono
Hulk
Released: Jun. 20, 2003
Hector Elizondo
Tortilla Soup
Released: Aug. 24, 2001
Chow Yun-Fat
Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon
Released: Jan. 12, 2001
Skeet Ulrich
Ride With the Devil
Released: Nov. 24, 1999
Adam Hann-Byrd
The Ice Storm
Released: Sep. 26, 1997
Gemma Jones
Sense and Sensibility
Released: Dec. 14, 1995
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